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6-letter words containing f

  • feirie — healthy; strong.
  • feisty — full of animation, energy, or courage; spirited; spunky; plucky: The champion is faced with a feisty challenger.
  • felice — a female given name, form of Felicia.
  • felids — Plural form of felid.
  • feline — belonging or pertaining to the cat family, Felidae.
  • felipe — León (Camino) [le-awn kah-mee-naw] /lɛˈɔn kɑˈmi nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1884–1968, Spanish poet, in South America after 1939.
  • fellah — a native peasant or laborer in Egypt, Syria, etc.
  • fellas — Plural form of fella.
  • felled — simple past tense of fall.
  • fellerRobert William Andrew ("Bob"; "Bullet Bob") 1918–2010, U.S. baseball player.
  • felloe — the circular rim, or a part of the rim of a wheel, into which the outer ends of the spokes are inserted.
  • fellow — a man or boy: a fine old fellow; a nice little fellow.
  • felons — A person who has been convicted of a felony.
  • felony — an offense, as murder or burglary, of graver character than those called misdemeanors, especially those commonly punished in the U.S. by imprisonment for more than a year.
  • felsic — (of rocks) consisting chiefly of feldspars, feldspathoids, quartz, and other light-colored minerals.
  • felted — simple past tense and past participle of feel.
  • felter — To clot or mat together like felt.
  • female — a person bearing two X chromosomes in the cell nuclei and normally having a vagina, a uterus and ovaries, and developing at puberty a relatively rounded body and enlarged breasts, and retaining a beardless face; a girl or woman.
  • fembot — (science fiction) A robot in female form.
  • femdom — (BDSM) female domination, a paraphilia in which women dominate men or other women.
  • femora — Anatomy. a bone in the human leg extending from the pelvis to the knee, that is the longest, largest, and strongest in the body; thighbone.
  • femto- — prefix
  • femurs — Plural form of femur.
  • fenced — a barrier enclosing or bordering a field, yard, etc., usually made of posts and wire or wood, used to prevent entrance, to confine, or to mark a boundary.
  • fencer — a person who practices the art of fencing with a sword, foil, etc.
  • fences — Plural form of fence.
  • fended — Simple past tense and past participle of fend.
  • fender — the pressed and formed sheet-metal part mounted over the road wheels of an automobile, bicycle, etc., to reduce the splashing of mud, water, and the like.
  • fenian — a member of an Irish revolutionary organization founded in New York in 1858, which worked for the establishment of an independent Irish republic.
  • fening — a monetary unit of Bosnia and Herzegovina, equal to 1⁄100 of a marka
  • fenman — a dweller in the Fens of England.
  • fennec — a small, pale yellowish-brown fox, Fennecus zerda, of northern Africa, having large, pointed ears.
  • fennel — a plant, Foeniculum vulgare, of the parsley family, having feathery leaves and umbels of small, yellow flowers.
  • fenrir — a wolflike monster, a son of Loki and Angerboda, chained by Gleipnir but destined to be released at Ragnarok to eat Odin and to be killed by Vidar.
  • fenris — a great wolf, bound by the gods with a magic rope
  • fenton — James (Martin). born 1949, British poet, journalist, and critic. His poetry includes the collections A German Requiem (1980) and Out of Danger (1993)
  • fenway — A park system that incorporates the wetlands in Boston, Massachusetts. Nearby is Fenway Park, the baseball stadium of the Boston Red Sox.
  • feoffs — Plural form of feoff.
  • feprom — Flash Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory
  • ferbam — an iron carbamate, C 9 H 18 FeN 3 S 6 , used chiefly as a fungicide for protecting certain farm crops.
  • ferberEdna, 1887–1968, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and playwright.
  • ferdus — Firdausi.
  • fergus — Irish Legend. one of the great warrior kings of Ulster.
  • ferial — Ecclesiastical. a weekday on which no feast is celebrated.
  • ferias — Plural form of feria.
  • ferine — feral1 .
  • ferior — (slang) From inferior by dropping prefix in-, meaning the opposite of inferior, or excellent, superior.
  • ferity — a wild, untamed, or uncultivated state.
  • ferlie — something unusual, strange, or causing wonder or terror.
  • fermatPierre de [pyer duh] /pyɛr də/ (Show IPA), 1601–65, French mathematician.
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